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Lion of Judah
Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2006 7:40 pm
by [b]racket
Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2006 8:06 pm
by 8
thanks for sharing this!
Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2006 8:22 pm
by spaceboy
lol
Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2006 8:53 pm
by auralassassin
badass!
Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2006 8:57 pm
by kion
lol what was that at 30.08

and 30.37! Someone's drawing for the arrows and shit
Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2006 9:10 pm
by kion
also lol at 'Britain offered Doctors, France offered culture'
All a bit post war and quaint!!
Posted: Sat Apr 15, 2006 10:19 pm
by rich_c90
Posted: Sun Apr 16, 2006 12:59 am
by hamzen
Fascinating docu that was followed by this
On Sept. 12, 1974, Haile Selassie was deposed, the constitution suspended, and Ethiopia proclaimed a Socialist state under a collective military dictatorship called the Provisional Military Administrative Council (PMAC), also known as the Derg. U.S. aid stopped, and Cuban and Soviet aid began. Lt. Col. Mengistu Haile Mariam became head of state in 1977. During this period Ethiopia fought against Eritrean secessionists as well as Somali rebels, and the government fought against its own people in a campaign called the “red terror.” Thousands of political opponents were killed. Mengistu remained leader until 1991, when his greatest supporter, the Soviet Union, dismantled itself.
A group called the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front seized the capital in 1991, and in May a separatist guerrilla organization, the Eritrean People's Liberation Front, took control of the province of Eritrea. The two groups agreed that Eritrea would have an internationally supervised referendum on independence. This election took place in April 1993 with almost unanimous support for Eritrean independence. Ethiopia accepted and recognized Eritrea as an independent state within a few days. Sixty-eight leaders of the former military government were put on trial in April 1996 on charges that included genocide and crimes against humanity.
Since Eritrea's independence, Eritrea and Ethiopia had disagreed about the exact demarcation of their borders, and in May 1998 Eritrea initiated border clashes that developed into a full-scale war that left more than 80,000 dead and further destroyed both countries' ailing economies. After a costly and bloody two-year war, a permanent cease-fire was reached in June 2000—Ethiopia had the upper hand when the fighting ceased—and a formal peace agreement was signed in Dec. 2000. The United Nations has provided more than 4,000 peacekeeping forces to patrol the buffer zone between the two nations. An international commission defined a new border between the two countries in April 2002. Ethiopia disputed the new border, escalating tensions between the two countries once again. In 2003, the border question was put on hold indefinitely.
In 2003, in an effort to solve its chronic shortage of food and to lessen its dependence on international aid, Ethiopia began relocating 2 million farmers from their parched highland homes to areas with more fertile soil in the western part of the country. The largest relocation program in African history, however, has turned into a disaster. The majority of those resettled are still unable to support themselves, and, most alarmingly, much of the fertile regions where the farmers have been resettled are rife with malaria.
And this
Like many countries in this region of Africa, Ethiopia
experiences food shortages at this time of year, but now after three failed harvests and continually poor rains up to 11 million people are at risk of starvation.
Posted: Sun Apr 16, 2006 2:40 pm
by bunzer0
good stuff for sampling ! Thanx
Posted: Sun Apr 16, 2006 8:25 pm
by conspira
Thanks man. Diggin this stuff.
Peace